Sunday, September 3, 2017

Painted in Italy before 1550

Piero di Cosimo
Misfortunes of Silenus
ca. 1500
oil on panel
Harvard Art Museums

Here when the Lord Octavian had made a stay, the Lord Gaspar saide:  "I had not thought our Courtier had beene so worthie a personage. But since Aristotle and Plato be his mates, I judge no man ought to disdaine this name any more. Yet wote I not whether I may believe that Aristotle and Plato ever daunced, or were Musitions in all their life time, or practised other feates of chivalrie."

The Lord Octavian answered: "Almost it is not lawful to thinke that these two divine wits were not skillful in every thing, and therefore it is to be presupposed that they practised what ever belonged to Courtlinesse. For where it commeth to purpose, they so penne the matter that the verie crafts masters themselves know by their writinges that they understood the whole, even the pith and innermost roots."

 from The Book of the Courtier (1528) by Count Baldassare Castiglione, done into English (1561) by Sir Thomas Hoby

Dosso Dossi
Holy Family with St John the Baptist, a cat, and donors
1512-13
oil on canvas
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Lorenzo Lotto
St Jerome Penitent
ca. 1513-14
oil on canvas
Brukenthal Museum, Sibiu, Romania

Cima da Conegliano
Virgin and Child with St Catherine and St John the Baptist
ca. 1515
oil on panel
Morgan Library, New York

Altobello Melone
Road to Emmaus
ca. 1516-17
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Giovanni Cariani
A Concert
ca. 1518-20
oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

You may remember also the foolish matter that not long agoe the Duke rehearsed of the Abbot, that being present upon a day when Duke Fredericke was talking where he shoulde bestow the great quantitie of rubbish that was cast up to lay the foundation of this Pallace, working dayly uppon it, saide: "My Lorde, I have well bethought mee where you shall bestow it, let there be a great pitte digged, and into that may you have it cast without any more adoe."

Duke Fredericke answered him not without laughter: "And where then shall we bestowe the quantitie of earth that shall be cast out of that Pitte?"  The Abbot saide unto him: "Let it be made so large, that it may wel receive both the one and the other."  And so for all the Duke repeated sundrie times the greater the Pitte was, the more earth should be cast out of it, yet could he never make it sinke into his braine, but it might be made so large that it might receive both the one and the other; and he answered him nothing else, but, "make it so much the larger."

 from The Book of the Courtier (1528) by Count Baldassare Castiglione, done into English (1561) by Sir Thomas Hoby

Giulio Romano
Madonna and Child with St John the Baptist
ca. 1522-24
oil on panel
Walters Art Museum, Baltimore

Vincenzo Catena
Holy Family with St John the Baptist
ca. 1523-27
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Bonifazio Veronese
Rest on the Flight into Egypt
ca. 1525-30
oil on panel
Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide

Sodoma
Holy Family with St John the Baptist
ca. 1525-27
oil on panel
Fondazione Musei Senesi

Andrea del Sarto
Lady with a book of Petrarch's verses
1528
oil on panel
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence

"The eyes therefore lye lurking like souldiers in war, lying in waite in bushment, and if the forme of all the bodie be well favoured and of good proportion, it draweth unto it and allureth who so beholdeth it a farre off: untill he come nigh: and as soone as he is at hand, the eyes shoote, and like sorcerers bewitch, and especially when by a right line they send their glistering beames into the eyes of the wight beloved, at the time when they doe the like, because the spirites meete together, and in that sweete encounter the one taketh the others nature and qualitie: as it is seene in a sore eye, that beholding stedfastly a sound one, giveth him his disease.  Therefore me thinke our Courtier may in this wise open a great parcell of the love to his woman." 

 from The Book of the Courtier (1528) by Count Baldassare Castiglione, done into English (1561) by Sir Thomas Hoby

Jacopo Bassano
Adoration of the Kings
ca. 1540-45
oil on canvas
National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh

attributed to Bernardino da Asola
Death of St Peter Martyr
ca. 1540-50
oil on canvas
National Gallery, London

Gaudenzio Ferrari
St Andrew
 before 1546
 oil on panel
National Gallery, London